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Magnesium ammonium nitrate chlorate

Ammonia gas, Carbon dioxide, Sodium chlorate Ammonia, Carbon dioxide. Sodium chlorate Hydrogen cyanide. Hydrocyanic acid. Prussic acid, Blausaure Hydrochloric acid. Methanol, ADNB, Methylene chloride. Nitric acid. Sodium bicarbonate. Magnesium sulfate 4,4-DNB, Methylene chloride. Magnesium sulfate. Sodium azide. Sodium hydroxide. Acetyl chloride. Ethyl acetate. Hexane TetranUine, Glacial acetic acid. Sodium azide Ammonium nitrate, TNT Sodium azide. Ammonia... [Pg.327]

Potassium bichromate. Antimony sulfide Potassium permanganate. Powdered sugar Barium chlorate, Paraffln wax Potassium perchlorate. Cane sugar Sodium nitrate. Sulfur Sodium peroxide. Sulfur Sodium chlorite. Aluminum powder Magnesium chlorate. Aluminum powder Guanidine nitrate. Antimony powder Ammonium nitrate. Gasoline... [Pg.332]

See Carbon dioxide, above Ammonium nitrate Metals Barium peroxide Metals Dinitrogen tetraoxide Metals Hydrogen peroxide Metals Lead(IV)oxide Metals Nitric acid Metals Oxygen (Liquid) Metals Potassium chlorate Metals Potassium perchlorate Powdered metals Sodium iodate Metals Sodium nitrate Magnesium See Halogens etc., above See Metal oxides, above See Metal oxosalts, above See Sulfur, etc., below... [Pg.1843]

Explosive reaction with chlorosulfuric acid, hydroiodic acid, magnesium perchlorate, chromyl chloride. Forms sensitive explosive mixtures with metal halogenates (e.g., chlorates, bromates, or iodates of barium, calcium, magnesium, potassium, sodium, zinc), ammonium nitrate, mercury(1) nitrate, silver nitrate, sodium nitrate, potassium permanganate. Violent reaction or ignition with alkalies + heat, fluorine, chlorine, liquid bromine, antimony pentachloride. Reacts with hot alkalies or hydroiodic acid to form... [Pg.1118]

AMMONIUM PHOSPHATE or sec-AMMONIUM PHOSPHATE or AMMONIUM PHOSPHATE, DIBASIC or AMMONIUM PHOSPHATE, MONOBASIC (7783-28-0, dibasic 7722-76-1,monobasic) HgN04P (monobasic) H9N2O4P (dibasic) Noncombustible solid. Contact with air slowly forms anhydrous ammonia. Contact with caustics forms anhydrous ammonia gas. Violent reaction with strong oxidizers, potassium chlorate sodium hypochlorite strong bases. Reacts with antimony(V) pentafluoride lead diacetate magnesium, silver nitrate zinc acetate. Heat of decomposition produces toxic fiimes of ammonia and phosphorus oxides. [Pg.74]

COPPER (7440-50-8) Cu The powder forms the friction-, heat-, or shock-sensitive explosive detonator, copper acetylide, with acetylene gas acetylenic compounds and ethylene oxides. The powder forms explosive materials with azides (e.g., sodium azide forms potentially explosive copper azide). Finely divided material forms friction-, heat-, or shock-sensitive explosive with powdered divided bromates, chlorates, and iodates of barimn, calcimn, magnesium, potassium, sodium, or zinc. Violent reaction, possibly explosive, when finely dispersed powder comes in contact with strong oxidizers ammonium nitrate alkynes, bromine vapor, calcium carbide, chlorine, ethylene oxide, hydrazine mononitrate, hydrogen peroxide, hydrogen sulfide, finely divided bromates, iodine, lead azide, potassium peroxide, sodium peroxide (incandescence), sulfuric acid. Incompatible with acids, anhydrous ammonia chemically active metals such as potassium, sodium, magnesium, and zinc, zirconium, strong bases. [Pg.278]

ACETIC ACID, AMMONIUM SALT (631-61-8) Violent reaction with strong oxidizers, ammonium nitrate, chlorine trifluoride, magnesium, potassium nitrite, sodium chlorate, sodium hypochlorite. Incompatible with nitrates. Forms a heat-sensitive explosive with 5-azidotetrazole. Reacts with gold chloride, forming fulminating gold, a heat-, friction-, and impact-sensitive explosive. Incompatible with sodium dichloroisocyanurate. [Pg.8]

An Italian patent refers to an Mncendiary mixture activated by water drops of powdered magnesium, anhydrous copper sulfate, ammonium nitrate, and potassium chlorate. The water permits both the exothermic reaction Mg+Cu++->Mg+ 4-Cu and the metathetical reaction of the salts, which produces the unstable ammonium chlorate. The latter then reacts with excess magnesium. While it is claimed that little heat is produced in moist air, this mixture is undoubtedly unstable and hazardous. There is a possibility of spontaneous ignition whenever a chlorate and an ammonium salt are present, though in some formulas they appear to be harmlessly combined. [Pg.46]

Ammonium dichromate Ammonium molybdate Ammonium nitrate Ammonium sulfate Barium carbonate Barium chloride Barium nitrate Borax Boric acid Caldum oxide Chromium trioxide Citric acid Potassium thiocyanate Sodium acetate Sodium aluminum fluoride Sodium bicarbonate Sodium chlorate Sodium chloride Sodium nitrate Sodium sulfate Triphenyl phosphate Ammonium chloride Ammonium fluoride Copper sulfate Magnesium chloride Oxalic acid Aluminum chloride Calcium chloride Ferric chloride Potassium permanganate Sodium carbonate Sodium fluoride... [Pg.609]

Aluminium borohydride Aluminium chloride Aluminium chlorate Ammonium tetrachloroaluminate Aluminium fluoride Aluminium trihydroxide Aluminium ammonium sulphate Aluminium potassium sulphate Aluminium nitride Aluminium nitrate Sodium aluminate Aluminium sodium aluminate Aluminium phosphate Aluminium phosphide Aluminium borate Aluminium oxychloride Aluminium fluorosilicate Aluminium magnesium silicate Aluminium sulphate... [Pg.459]

AMMONIUM HYPO SOLUTION (7783-18-8) Slowly deocmposes in water. Reacts violently with carbon dust, finely divided aluminum, magnesium, potassium. Incompatible with sulfuric acid, isocyanates, strong oxidizers, chlorates, nitrates, nitrites (forms ammonia), hydrogen sulfide, and sulfur trioxide gases,... [Pg.100]

The simultaneous detection of small cations (ammonium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and strontium) and anions (bromide, chloride, nitrite, nitrate, sulfate, perchlorate, thiocyanate, and chlorate) from low explosives in postblast residue using an elaborate electrolyte composed of a cationic chromophore and modifiers (imidazole/HIB A/18-crown-6 ether/ACN), an anionic chromophore (1,3,6-naphthalenesulfonic acid) and flow reversal agent (tetramethylammonium hydroxide) has been presented. " ... [Pg.942]


See other pages where Magnesium ammonium nitrate chlorate is mentioned: [Pg.268]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.871]    [Pg.890]    [Pg.940]    [Pg.968]    [Pg.975]    [Pg.1091]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.981]    [Pg.984]    [Pg.1092]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.711]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.1157]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.1064]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.979]    [Pg.114]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.180 ]




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